MAXIMS or A MAXIMS MERE MAN “F " , MERE MAN ..f.:.':.:;“: :::,";...:...i:."‘.:.'i.:.':: Th >W’ /”' , -~ e Peoples Paper Everybody .22.‘: Covers Prince Edward 1 Island “Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1936 Charlottetown Guardian Two Oenil llorning Gulrllnn. Founded I887 , Annuul Sublcriptlon Delivered $1.00 lly Mull Cunudu and U. H. A. M-MJ 3 PAGES Frlmsglsg PREPARE FOR DRIVE 01v MADRID FOREST FIRE DElAwTRH W COMING fVENTS ' nDancc at Corran Bun Thursday, up, October 1st. L-6839-9-20-2i. “WWW monochrome: Tou. MOUNTS 11v (JRFEQN V915 Agimg] Lo... Horses WVHLEE m: rlzes At Halifax olloollt llflllliifllig .llESl_ll_llYElll _ Other Communities U h 1 t e d C h h r c h Threatened. Heavy Loyalist Forces In Full Retreat Towards Capitol Story 0f Siege_Of Alcazar Re- vealed By Defenders. All But 80 Survive. (liy The flssocizlted Press) Where Armies Are Battling HALIFAX, Sept. 28 A Prince Ed- ward Island horse, Count Meeh, own- ed by R. P‘ Seaman‘ of Charlotte- town won first prize in the class for Jumpers at the Nova Scotiu Exhibition horse show tonight. Titrodite, also ovmed by Mr. Seaman cnmc third in the com- Y REBEMS g: LOYALI srs F "Dulce in Ions. hall Wednesday piplenlbcr 39th L—6854-9-29-2i "Dance at Welcome Inn, Brack- yy, Wednesday, September 30th. L-6844-9-29-2i. "Regular meeting of Rebekni‘ Lodtge tNQ 1i]. ilcdIllJQgLZiJlLTiB AVILA T D R petl‘ f dl ks 152 cl 1 |>,.\I. mpor an . - L, - - . , urns own ec0m_ lion or rorl lac . an tie - I I _ v , _ .. O SAN Mnqfl" . f same horse came second amongst LOSS ‘Sustalned l“ 1 Th‘ 713i“) nlghlmarv of Shut‘ She“ and flvlllllllllt‘ f0!‘ the "Dance F°llune Hall FY3111)’. mendatlons 0 Com‘ the horses suitable to become a. valuable Timber i200 595192011 Insurgents and their families in ’l‘oledil's Al- mobvr 2nd. Clifford Peters, 4 pece - . I cazar fortress was onlv a memorv M! I r ' .. g-cheslra 25 cents L-6832-9-29-3f mlsslon- hum" “M” 1'10‘) l’°“h‘h' A Th ' . ' - . "M"? mhhh . . - __-_ I . _____ In the hunter ems L250 pounds rea. t liflllzlfilxlfgeni captors of loleilo itself reported all but 8f) "Srvon Mile Bay TPPSdP-l’ 589'" BY GUY E. RnQADE-s and over, Midnight. Owned by Mrs’ ‘vemwilorn ‘llllflhlilltlilSlfifl eilziilr-rzllive. Some 500 of the Canadian Press Staff Writer G. H. Buntain of Charlottetown MARSHMELD, ORE" Sept. Meebin r f. 4n h?‘ | w“: ‘he. SHHL we“, “.0undod_$0me i. iom s mpnel, some burned. and others maimed ember 29th, usual dance Wellington mchgstm L-ealz-g-za-z‘ OTTAWA- sfpl- all-mp)‘ The came Second’ 28-151’) — TWBMY "Wllfimh by dynamite explosions "Card Party Auction. HolY seventh General Cour“ °-t the rvsllll-‘MS of "*""¢'""K°‘l Poison ens ‘the instill-rents churued h-id" ilSf h th ‘ ‘ ' ‘ f i x Z f FfllWmPl” "all mmilhl- P141“ m United Church o! Canada may l . S°“'h“"‘“°"‘ 0mm" "WM “h , daily lot of their besieged comrade-i 41- k .d l | cell, - e iilliE of $10.00 L-682l-9-29-1i. voted ovorwheunlngly against slls- . “no. tonight the m» of their , ceqqvlntl‘v h‘, 60W. i, T ._ ‘ "~ “ “c ‘ h W“ 1"‘ ‘mum as “my heard that mm ~~¢ . _ lnmen mi itmmen. and bombarded from pension of theological faculties at two western colleges, turning back , recommendations for their sus- i‘ pension contained in l1 report of l the commission on Christian Edu- l .' land and air. lives and possibly 15 had been l lost when forest fires laid waste the village of Bandon. With so many fires burning "New Zealand Dramatic Club at ll. Margarets Hail Wednesday scpi. 30 L6848-9-29-1i l 'I‘he rescued asked to be allowed to Join their rescuers in the filial march on Ziiadrld, the reports said, FflillllllFRENlIll' “Hunt. "Bean Supper, Rose Valley Hull "Borden, Friday Oct. 2nd card "of Mr. and- "'Grond Bazaar Hope River Wed- nesday Sept. 30th. Supper 6 P. M. bingo, sale of goods etc. L-68l4-9-28-3i "Masquerade Dimce, Lorne Val- ley Hall, September 30th, aid Women's Institute. Webster's Orch- will. L-6837-9-20-2i. "Buying live hogs and lambs, lllllllli’ Thursday, ist, Emerald ind until noon. G. C. Green. L-5113-6-twt-tf. "Dr. LaCollrsiere. Dentist, will "Seven Mile Bay Wednesday. September 30th, Bloomfield Enter-i timers, good program. Dance after. ' L-G824-9-29-3i. "lllacDonald Women's Institute Chicken Supper at Guy Stewart's Tm Hill on Thursday October 1st. L6853-0-29-3i "Georgetown players prcsfTlt “l”? Dilly Kelly's Cross Hall. Tiles- d-"l.\'_5-"pl. 29th, very best specialties 50ml evening. L-58l17-9-28-2l v"'I‘\\'o ladies desire il'lii‘i§i)0i‘lfl-, lion to Boslon and return before‘ 3°? 8 Apply M. care of Guardian: X46860 ~""ClilCl{0l‘l Supper" served in fill!‘ Traverse ilzlll Sept. 30th from ‘ llo B P. M. by Womcns Institute‘. ll no! fine came foliowing evcningl .0: and 30c [.5352 . .___ p l, hl-flfifll"! live h0g5. lambs and “ll/ES Ht Kensingzton Thursday “Wmllll; Oct. 1st; Nicholson Bros. haflllll; at Hunter River some dole. 51d. McEwen and Campbell. L-68l3-9-2B-2i "York Little Theatre Players are gflle road with the i936 show. ljlll"! at Uigg, Thursday, October 5' Rllll Kingston Monday, October 5th. Watch for posters ln your com- "lllllllv. L-6800-it. "Annual meeting of the Pro- vlilclal council, Girl Guides As- lmllllon. and the Charlottetown Ol-‘ol association will be held on “may Oct. an. in the Board Wm. City Building. at a P. M, L6858-9-29-2i m°‘Easlern King's Livestock Ship- B club will hold a meeting in dllle Pond school house Wednes- ofly evening September 80th at l l °l°¢l< General agricultural ‘lillllscts will be discussed, especi- ‘nil livestock feeding and market- i- All farmers invited to attend. L-6809-9-28-2i "118- uumum 1'0 MAKE FILM “WW YORK, sepi. oa-(cr) - _ ‘f- Beryl Markham, South Afri- Lill flier who was first of her sex themlllv the westward crossing of WlkAtlantio by air, has signed to h; I motion picture, the con- d m‘ “RIDER? mnounced to- ‘Y- It was mo the m... would ‘lmll-PIY her great achievement." TAl-AVERA saunas TORRIJOS This map shows the portion of Spain in which is concentrated the Major share of the rebeYs activity ln the drive ' bot-h loyalists and rebels reporting advances, the fact still remains enormous casualty lists there has been little real ad that despite on Madrid- With vancc by either side. Towns NW riedly captured by rebels in their onslaught are now undecided lmoe loyalists reportedly blocked the advance. Russian Foreign Commissar Denounces Naziism And Fascism At League Meeting BY JOSEPH E. SHARKEY Associated Press Foreign Staff GENEVA. Sept. 28-—(AP)—Maxim Litvinoff, Russian Foreign Com- missnr, tonight denounced Nazlism and Foscsm as "enemies or civil- izntlozl", in n vehement reply to re- cent Nuzi charges that Bolshev- ism was "world enemy No. 1." Litviuoff, in a vigorous defence of his country's desire for world peace, rose in the League of Na- tions Assembly and declared: “They (Nnziism and Fascism) are the deadly enemies of all working people and of civilization!" He mentioned neither Chancellor iililrr nor Premier Mussolini by name. but delivered vitriolic ut- lucks on those responsible for the doctrines of the Nazis and Fascists. Rusia, he asserted, was unalter- obly opposed to entry into the Lea- gue o!‘ any nation with political rule "founded on racial and nation- al inequality which describes all people except its own as sub-hu- man." Any state ruled by a man who in- dulges in territorial conquests, Lit- vinoff declared, was not acceptable to the League of Nations. Especially should League doors be barred against countries whose leaders "enumerate vast territories which they intend violently to se- parate from other countries," he sold, apparently referring to Hit- lcrs recent saying Germany would be prosperous "if we had" the Ukraine wheat fields of Russia. Despite opposition to League ad- mission of any such country, Lit- vinoff said his Government stood ready to make agreements with even "the most aggressive coun- tries." and recommended convoca- tion of a European peace confer- once. “If any stale refuses to partici- pate," he declared, "every one will see our road and theirs do not run together. We must organize for peace without them." 7 (Continued on Page 7) Zeppelin Passes Over Province (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Sept. Zli-The Zeppelin i-Iindenburg bound for Lakehurst, N. J., from Germany, reported by radio at 3 P. M. A. S31‘. it was passing over Prince Edward Island. F. W. Von Mcister, American representative of the Zeppelin interests, said the dlriglble would be moored in Lokehurst tomorrow morning. Due to strong head winds. the ship wns travelling lit about 30 miles an hour. TlzousandsAreDrivenFrom Texas Lowlands By Floods WAGO, TEX, Sept. 28—(CP) - Lowlnnd dwellers of central and west Texas ‘fled ‘tonight before crests from a dozen wild streams for the second time in 10 days. Four were dead, refugees num- bered thousands and damage soar- ed into the millions as rivers and tributaries, fed by heavy autumnal Film. poured through fields and towns. Relief from further rainfall wu Men o! lklea cleared after arrival of the season's first cool snap. Damage eatimnteci at 85,000,000 "rennin. in lat week's disaster ln the Ben Ancelo area, will not be equalled, survey “pol-Lg “up At Waco, when 2,500 homeless refugees received aid from Na- tional Guardsmen and the Red Cross, the damage mounted put $1,500,000. J. C. Pntterson, county agent, said battered corn and cot- ton crops had been damaged $1,- 000,000. Hundreds of funilles in Brown and Mcculioch counties who had retumed to flood-scarred homes for rehabilitation work, fled inyterror agalniwday when the Colorado threatened an encore of the, dia- astrous rise of l0 days ago. At Winchell, 19 miles south of Brownwood, the Colorado surged upwards at the rate of a foot an hour and reached o. stage of 51- feet-ncord of the previous flood. cation. The Council approved a. sessional committee report which found that withdrawal of theological colleges from university centres would "ser- iously imperil" the work of the church in exerting its "profound in- fluence on the life of the young men and women who are to be the future leaders of the nation" and its training of candidates for Lhe ministry. The commission. appointed by the executive committee on resolution of the last General Council to sur- rcy the thcologricol college situa- tion, recommended suspension ,0! theological courses at St. Stephen's college in Edmonton and Manitoba college at Winnipeg and restriction of their religious teaching to sub- jects optional in the arts coursrs of the universities with which the colleges are affiliated. Rev. C. E. Crowell, Halifax, said the Halifax Presbytery was of the Continued on’ Page 7)’: War Time Naval Commander flies BOSTON, Sept- ZB-lAPJ-Admira] Will am S» Sims, war time com- llllllflfir of the United Slates flect. in Eurcprrln tvatcrs, and a native of Port Hope. Ontario, died of a reart attack here today" He was "l7. ' The rrtired uavnl officer under- iventnn opn-ation in June and nppcnrcd to be regaining his health. But he suffered o heart attack yes- bcrdny at the home of a. daughter here, Mrs. Roimrt Hopkllls» end ll gered until today. Woman Opposed in iiivio Contest (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) HALIFAX, Sept. 28—Alm0st, 200 years after this Garrison city was founded, a complacent city council considered tonight the possibility of being joined by the‘ first "Alderwoman" in its history. But Mrs. M. T. Sullivan, a lead- ing Halifax social worker, will have a. fight she did not anticipate when she posted her nomination papers today-and ' that. film Wlll b9 against a man, Albert P. Cainen, real estate ERM- TEA is delicious Switzerland. Nether- lands, Latvia and Greece to Abandon Gold Standard. (AP. By Guardian's Special Wire) Following Wench efforts to (ic- voluate the franc under an agree- nomic equilibrium," four nations to- day moved to realign their curren- cics. Italy lmd Germany alone of the great powers were not officially committed to changed monetary politics. The countries which decided to follow the French lead toward were Switzerland, the Netherlands. Lclviu and Greece. sWilZETliiilfl pared hcr franc 30 per cent and lmptlsed decrees against price-ralsers and increased cost of living. The Netherlands established an equalization fund for the Guilder. which Premier l-lcnclrikus Collin said would be left i0 find its own level. Latvia nbantlcncd ilic gold slanti- ard, and set the exchange rate at the i931 level for the Lot at a ratc of 25.22 to the pond sterling. The Bank of Greece decided to udjusl the Dmchma to the Pound sterling instead of the franc, and fixed the exchange rntc at between 546 and 550 Draclimus to the pound. The situation m other European countries: Germany-Official statement t0 the contrary, financiers Sillfl mark devaluation still was possible. Italy-Stock nnci foreign mnrts closed. but authoritative fmnncloi sources held devaluation of iii-u un- likely. kets opened; dealings banned in French and Swiss francs and Dutch gulden. AIRS said Turkey would not change currency value, already nligncxi with sterling. Belglum—Sl/ack market opened; Franc and Guldcn dealings banned. WAS NATIVE OF PROVINCE HALIFAX, Sept. 28-40. P.) —— Quartennaster Sargcanl. H. Porrlcr died in hospital here today after 22 years of military service. He was born in Montague, P.E.I. 4’ ~ -—--.--. l I cullliiml lilo, menh with Great Britain and the ‘ , United States to maintain ecu-l abnlitlcnlucilt of the gold standard ‘ London-Foreign exchange mi\r-, Turkey — Foreign Minister Rustu . in o. 400,000-acrc area. forest of- ficials said it was impossible" to any how many acres had been damaged. A stok- policeman at the vil- lage of Couquille, glancing up at skies so black that day look- ed like night, voiced the fear of many: "If the wind changes, God help , this place and (nearby) Myrtle f point. Thcyll go like Bandon did." ‘ Bnudon, in an hour Saturday flight. was transformed from a pretty little coastal port into an i inferno in which virtunllyl the en- tire population of 1,500 saw pos- sessions of a lifetime go up in roar- ing flames. In the small coastal towns of Oregon and sections of northern California literally hundreds of fires broke out. caused principally by burning of slnshlngs-debrls left from timber operations. British Planes For 'Maritime Service l LONDON, Sbpt. 28——-\CP Cable) “The first CJXIIDlGIL‘ fleet, of Bri- tish aircraft built for Canada was and their pleas \\'(‘r(- grzuilcri They told of the hundreds of men, women and children hwvinl! nothing to eat bu: rancid bread and horseflesh for more than 5O days. They told of ammunition run-Q Illni; 10W and of men willing to face certain death ralher llmn surrend- er, 'They said at least 9.000 ilirec and four-inch shells had bffli fired into the Alcnzur silica the sclgo be- gan. That would be more than 122:3 l every clay of the siege. There is another side of the story —the story of the anxiety of the, world for those who elected to die with their families rather than sllr- , render to their own countrymen. l Time and time again diplomats} besought the besieged Fascists to‘ surrender their women and child- ren. , The (liphmats guaranteed safety, for all non-combatants Wlllllil the. fortress-the male defenders were doomed to certain rlenlh before fir- lng squads irhrilevcr ihey elected‘, to do ' The answer was always ihc some. -ne\‘cr! Copyright 1930 by the Associated Press l TOLEDO, SPAIN. Supt. 2B -—- y named today llt Honworth by Lady Shclmerdinc, wife of the director- gelrsrni of civil aviation. The five machines comprising the first units of the fleet also are = the first British airplanes special- ly dcr-igncd as frcighters. They were built by General Aircraft for ‘Ellolffll Canada Airlines lllld arc l named after the five cities betlvecn l which they will operate: Moncton. l N.B., Halifax. N.S., Saint John, N. lAPl-Confideul Insurgent fort-cs, conquerors of Toledo, totlilzii’. prc- 1 pared for what they hop ' would l be a fuinl czmiirncu i.» l Wild- cud the . rid, 40 miles 1.01111, and » Spanish civil um". (All but 80 of the Ufllillfll i300 men. women and cliiiclleti who lied .10 refuge in the A‘. win» l(‘.'- .cucd, official Ins . .t l‘\‘§\0f"\ ‘ ‘ reaching Tnlnvcrzl do in RPlllll l _ 1 claimed. Some 50f) of th~ be l\"_'(‘ll .8" Blanch NS" and Gun-lotte- Fasc-i-‘ts and their fnzmlv. "acre é town. wounded, it was stntrrll. y Gordon England, manager-dircc- chewed h\,g,pl,k__l,l\_ w“ _m_ l tor Gcnerhl Aircraft’ said the tut‘ l braced by ‘their (‘Oliiffllllhn the l that‘ ‘l new Chhhdihr‘ ‘wmpany had , bearded Alcozar livfelxlhr, l)l""l_‘l‘(l i ,c°m° L0 m“ om country to pm’ permission to inclim<~iuili~ tlivm- , I chose n complete fleet. would help $591,193 m H“, hvpumg m C“\vyc14al , _ to give the lie to the story which “autism mane” m ml)’, h.‘ f“, the ‘ l w“ “m8 Spmd 51mm“ PY $°m° jklil" at lvindritl. 1, t “hm? lhwresls ll served that the i Insurgent: tozzicli: Fli.ll'l‘i.l Gnv- ‘ ‘British Mrcmrl‘ Industry w” loo l ernmcnt militiamen with using _ bllslb" cllsllllvd lll lllllltflrv nwdlm- lpgignn G515 1n 1}". _ , u .r. n. ii..=..~.ii.i..1- fill-vial Wile) “Oh to hhvc “me for clvll ma‘ G1- l Aliil-lvrulilgieill ullTlfl‘, Toronto, ClIlIlPS- iContinucii on Pam- 71 sip". 28 lC.l‘.l - Alilizlilum and T‘*—“=‘— l‘. ntnnlllm ienlperalll , l)\'.‘.‘.\. ll ~~ » fl — M ~~ 130.45 Says Japan ReadyForAny s" w" i“ \\'ll.l.ipr;; -- ~~ -- -— ~ --- -- 1H. 54 l E I . h . I O ‘lorollltl — »— -- — --- ~ 45. fill mergency I‘! U10 YlSlS llll-“i- - ~ ~~ — — —— ~ 40- l" ' Montreal ~ -— -- _ — -- - - 44 é-i (A. P. By Guardian's smiiu Wire) "If negotiations h...“ ,1 G0,, ti“ 1“"1’]' m - _ " T '_ “l " TOKYO. 59M- ‘JR Ilacliiro Arila. that. moon unr?" he \\'.l\ wk ll H‘, l“ m _ — m v - l " ‘fill.’ — --—--..-- _. Jnplmese Foreign Minister, warned “There's no such worll :1." wnr ‘m (..,_,l.,,,.l_,u_,.n W] '|“ tti h ....-. .. , ‘ "" """ “ownyuérc Jlflllltw UirmyL land, llll ".l.\]\.\ili$i (llilllv.l..l.ll \ .. |ll.ll~ . gwuwun", wminu,‘ _ DUN,“ w, l . y c “ml m (‘my o“ wml‘ ! 111i.‘ lll‘ flll$\\'l‘l'l ll. ‘Iliilillli’. lil.f'llii\'f‘\ll‘l'l_\' wlluiv. f.iir lillil moi . ever measures are necessary to sup- Allin nfiserlvil (1.11... my n,“ ‘ pwss the Anti-Japanese cumpaigny; 1.0mm n“, granny “f mu smmj. High nae m“ mornml w, W. .. h ‘ _ _ I . ...._ ._ .~. ougCmiga is ‘now "ll. the tmolnent l lion. , “m, ummm m 931 lli ll ssroms m“ Imls decmc' (The Tokyo Govpmlhrhl- ml‘: Sui‘. sets lliis .ll"ilil1(lll a‘. Ti i". l‘ 0461' 01' I101 fllf‘ “lll Sllfll€91llliliillg lllXlll ll #01108 Of ll".('i(lt‘ll‘.f- ..l\.‘. lses lonllirri-\\' murnlnir fl‘ Fi-W zlfllldfi with Japan," Ariitl. told (luring lhc past month in which i q‘; "lr mum l ' ' 1 r ~ ." . -. Qfflli" COITESDOIKlPIM-s- _ _ five Japanese ueie kill. (l and (our 0;‘. l, 82B om. e opinion is steadily growmgmthoys hum.“ award“, as p", n“ S,_,nm,_,_ 1,, Wu. 18 mm ‘M: 1A.“. RIgIOIiQ Japanese at homo andl suit. of GOYPFiliHflli-li\lli"lllf‘fl lEi-un (‘li:li'..-toi<.-,vi., a road that further negotiations bitterness. has cicmnuclicl Add,“ rnr. (‘All iwiiuv "or Japanese nlvlwllelll are llse- protection toi- its li1ii0l11lS inl -. .'(."'i-‘"..""""" h“ “" "' ‘ "' “" 195' ' China). l‘ l "mun-hung n \ u. mo I I. All l’. l. Dflly exrrpt fluufily l New Jersey officials." lzlllio lillvi P TREIWYQN. NJ“ Sept. 28--—lAP) ~4Nf'\\' Jersey OlilClllLa expressed \\'lllli‘.l_‘ii;'SS twcinv to (oznpare fin- L',(‘l‘])l'lllLS of Cliatlez» A. Lindbergh, Jr. with thew of a. living child in Iiiiilas, 'I‘e.\;;l:\, reported to re- semble liizlt. Col. Iiiark Klllil)[‘1‘llll§. state police l Sllperlliiltitlmli, :li.Cl he would in- slst, hovwrcr, lliilt in ll‘ event of m comparison, the 1.111.511. .. of the l lrillas child or of any other "liv- ing Lindbergh baby‘ musz be sen; to Trenton. Governor Harold Hoffman, in- furmircl of a Dulles ne spnperman that, there were rimio in ihc city the Lindbergh baby s l.\ in the care of a womzlu of for. gii nationality, requested lhe report be checked. The Dallas Times-Herald said if. learned from "reliable sources that "lllcrcl- Wlnfil’: to lllf‘ possibility of the blond Dallas boy being Clin- les Llli(ll)(‘l'£!l‘l, Jr._ for whose ab- {llWilUfl Bruno Riclia Hzluptmnnn was executed inst s; inc. was of ‘ sufficient plnusibilitjv to interest,